Date archives "April 2011"

The State of the Art of Complementary Currencies and its Open Source Software in 2010

“The International Journal of Community Currency Research (IJCCR) has produced a special edition which details some of the recent developments in the field of complementary currencies. It contains fifteen short papers which encompass discussions of the wider field, geographic reviews and reports on new forms of currency innovation. The edition highlights the growing range of… Continue reading

Ugo Mattei on the State, the Market, and some Preliminary Question about the Commons

All this, evidently requires the jurist’s attention to the difficult and urgent task of constructing the new foundation of a legal order capable of transcending the property-state dualisms inherent in the current order. Given the dominance of private property, individualism, and competition as the basis of the current legal order, the new order must correct… Continue reading

An updated assessment on the ‘hacking the state’ strategy (2), by ‘Poor Richard’

Excerpted from Poor Richard’s blog: Poor Richard: “On the Hack the State site, Toni Prug writes: Armed revolutionaries and anarchists hate the state. Social democrats want to be the state. I say we better hack it. [W]e need to Hack the State (hack as reuse by clever re-purposing of what’s already here), to make it… Continue reading

The Five Protestant Solas and the Hacker Ethic

Excerpted from a 2007, BA Sociology dissertation on Free Software, by Toni Prug: “The basic theological points of the Reformation are called the Five Solas. The first one, Solus Christus (Christ alone) refuses Pope and church as Christ’s representatives and preaches that Christ, and no one else, mediates between God and man. The second one,… Continue reading

The swarm as a method of work organisation

Excerpted from Bob Cannell: “It is possible to organise communications in a better way. One that utilises the collected intelligence of the agents (people) in the network rather than suppressing intelligence into the obedience necessary to operate a business process production line (and then moaning about your workers for not obeying the rules). The most… Continue reading

Josef Jacotot’s Peer to Peer Pedagogy of Equality

Reproduced/excerpted from the new commons-oriented, and strongly recommended, political magazine called “Stir To Action”: Nina Powers presents: * ‘On Ignorant Schoolmasters’, Jacques Rancière, published as Chapter 1 of Jacques Rancière, Education, Truth, Emancipation, by Charles Bingham and Gert Biesta (London, Continuum: 2010), pp. 1-24. “Rancière’s rescue of the historical Jacotot has proved to be enormously… Continue reading

Re-using market and state forms (planning) with p2p purposes in mind

State and market are real abstractions fetishised in capitalist society. But let us think, one moment, that we can disaggregate state and market instruments, de-contextualise and re-assemble them for new purposes This contribution from a Turkish socialist author is also interesting from a p2p perspective: Excerpted from the Nights of labour blog: “Planning has been… Continue reading

The four rules of a Open-by-Rule Community

Excerpted/reproduced from Simon Phipps, this is a very concise description of the minimum characteristics of peer governance, as applied to free software production: Simon Phipps: “What does authentic open source community governance look like? An open source community will involve many people gathering for their own independent reasons around a free software commons with source… Continue reading

Business models for DIY Craft

Few months ago, Platoniq commissioned me a report about business models for Open Hardware, DIY Craft and Fab Labs, for their crowdfunding project Goteo. It is now available on openp2pdesign.org, and it will be soon available in Spanish from Platoniq’s YouCoop website. I’m now reposting it here, since the text is under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0… Continue reading

Day against DRMs

Wednesday May 4, 2011 will be the third annual international Day Against DRM. The Day Against DRM is an opportunity to unite a wide range of projects, public interest organizations, web sites and individuals in an effort to raise public awareness to the danger of technology that requires users to give-up control of their computers… Continue reading

Hacking the State

Adoption of hacking is a political possibility that is here and now, in front of us. Its spirit, its ethics and organization gave us the Web, the Internet and the means to produce new collective entities and open plethora of decentralized, yet synchronized and resilient battling fronts. Local councils, courts, parliaments, political parties, unions, childcare,… Continue reading